ALBURG v. JONES

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 21, 2025
Docket2:20-cv-02419
StatusUnknown

This text of ALBURG v. JONES (ALBURG v. JONES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ALBURG v. JONES, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

AYANA M. ALBURG : CIVIL ACTION TIMOTHY Q. EDWARDS : : v. : : ELIJAH K. JONES, THOMAS G. : FALCON, DOUGLAS DRAKE, COLONEL : ROBERT EVANCHICK, DETECTIVE LT. : CHARLES A. PALO, JR., TIMOTHY : KEARNEY, CAPTAIN SCOTT : WILLOUGHBY, TOWNSHIP OF RIDLEY : a/k/a Ridley Township and JOHN DOE : NO. 20-2419

MEMORANDUM OPINION Savage, J. May 21, 2025 Can a car owner steal her own car? Despite the obvious answer, the defendant police officers insist they had probable cause to arrest and prosecute the car owner and the driver of her car who was operating it with her permission for theft offenses. It all started when plaintiff Ayana Alburg surreptitiously retrieved her car from a storage lot where a loan company had it towed after it was repossessed. The lot attendant called the police to report a theft. Defendant Elijah Jones, a Pennsylvania State Police (“PSP”) Trooper who responded to the call, listed the car as stolen on a national database. Alburg was eventually arrested and prosecuted for stealing her car. In the meantime, plaintiff Timothy Edwards, while driving Alburg’s car with her permission, was arrested and prosecuted for receiving stolen property and traffic offenses. Unable to make bail, he spent two weeks in jail. Then came this § 1983 lawsuit. Alburg brought claims for illegal seizure of property, deprivation of property without due process, conversion, false arrest, false imprisonment, failure to train, and malicious prosecution. Edwards raised claims for false arrest, false imprisonment, failure to train, and malicious prosecution.1 After a long procedural history, including a trip to the Third Circuit and back, several

rounds of motions to dismiss, a motion for judgment on the pleadings, and reassignments to two district judges, the plaintiffs’ claims have been reduced and some defendants have been dismissed.2 The remaining claims are: (1) Count I against Jones and Ridley Township Police Detective Charles A. Palo Jr. for illegal seizure of Alburg’s car and deprivation of property without due process; (2) Count II against Jones and Corporal Thomas J. Falcon for false arrest of Alburg; (3) Count VI against Jones and Falcon for malicious prosecution of Alburg; and (4) Count VI against Jones, Palo, and Ridley Township Police Officer Timothy Kearney for malicious prosecution of Edwards. The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs move for summary judgment on liability on Alburg’s false arrest and malicious prosecution claims

against Jones and Falcon, Alburg’s claim of illegal seizure and violation of due process against Jones and Palo, and Edwards’s claim of malicious prosecution against Jones, Kearney and Palo. Palo moves for summary judgment on Alburg’s illegal seizure claim. Kearney and Palo move for summary judgment on Edwards’s malicious prosecution claim. Jones and Falcon move for summary judgment, arguing Jones was not involved in the seizure of the car. All defendants invoke qualified immunity. The undisputed facts show that Jones, Kearney, and Palo are entitled to summary judgment on Count I for claims of illegal seizure of Alburg’s car and denial of due process. Because there are factual disputes and credibility issues bearing on the probable cause element on the remaining counts, we shall deny summary judgment on Count II for false arrest and Count VI for malicious prosecution as to Alburg. Jones, Palo, and Kearney are entitled to qualified immunity as to Edwards’s malicious prosecution claim.

Background Ayana Alburg obtained a loan from Auto Equity Loans of DE, LLC (“AEL”).3 The loan, which had a 300% A.P.R. interest rate, was secured by a lien on Alburg’s 2006 BMW X5.4 After Alburg defaulted, AEL hired Top Notch Recovery, Inc. (“Top Notch”) to repossess the car,5 which it did. On August 3, 2018, Alburg went to the Top Notch lot to get her personal possessions.6 While the lot attendant and owner, Christopher Smith, was with another person, Alburg drove her car away.7 Smith called the police and reported a stolen car.8 He informed State Trooper Elijah Jones, who responded to the call, that Top Notch had repossessed the car on behalf of AEL.9 He showed Jones an “order to repossess.”10 It

was AEL’s request for Top Notch to repossess Alburg’s car, not a court order.11 Jones entered the car as stolen in the national CLEAN/NCIC crime database.12 He summarized the event in the database, stating the “registered owner left with the vehicle.”13 The database named Alburg as the registered owner.14 Two weeks later, on August 17, 2018, Edwards was driving the car with Alburg’s permission.15 After observing a blue tarp covering the rear window, Ridley Township Police Officer Kearney ran the car’s tag in the CLEAN database.16 The search reported the car as stolen.17 Kearney stopped the car and arrested Edwards.18 At the police station, Edwards was charged with receiving stolen property, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, driving under a suspended license, and driving without a license.19 Kearney had the vehicle towed to Verone’s Collision.20 The following day, AEL retrieved the car from Verone’s and later sold it at auction.21 In his report, Kearney described the car stop and the arrest. He wrote that the vehicle was “owned” by AEL.22

Palo, relying on Kearney’s report, drafted a criminal complaint and an affidavit of probable cause against Edwards.23 In the affidavit, Palo identified AEL as the owner of the vehicle.24 He did not include that Alburg was the registered owner and that the incident involved a repossession.25 Based on Palo’s affidavit and criminal complaint, a magisterial district judge issued an arrest warrant, charging Edwards with receiving stolen property and unauthorized use of a vehicle.26 He also approved summary offenses of driving without a license and driving on a suspended license.27 Bail was set at $10,000.28 Edwards remained in jail for two weeks until he was able to post bail.29 Alburg’s counsel sent a letter, dated August 22, 2018, to Jones and Corporal

Thomas Falcon.30 He explained that Alburg was the title owner of the car, she could not have stolen her own car, Edwards had permission to drive her car, AEL was a secured creditor trying to collect a debt, and the police were required to stay neutral in creditor- debtor disputes.31 Falcon, Jones’s supervisor, considered bringing charges against Alburg.32 He sought the advice of Assistant District Attorney Evan Correia, who advised him that ownership of the vehicle is determined by the title.33 Falcon reviewed the title, which listed Alburg as the owner and AEL as a lien holder.34 Disregarding the assistant district attorney’s legal advice, Falcon pressed forward. He decided that she was not the owner of the vehicle and AEL was the “true owner.”35 He directed Jones to file a criminal complaint against Alburg.36 Jones drafted a criminal complaint and an affidavit of probable cause in which he represented that the vehicle was owned by AEL.37 Based upon the complaint and the affidavit, a magisterial district judge issued an arrest warrant

charging Alburg with theft by unlawful taking, theft by deception, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.38 On February 4, 2019, Alburg was arrested.39 The Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas dismissed the theft charges on May 22, 2019, and the charge for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle on September 13, 2019.40 On February 12, 2019, in the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, Edwards pleaded guilty to driving on a suspended license.41 The judge imposed a $200 fine. The theft charges were dismissed.42 Standard of Review Summary judgment is appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no genuine

dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 56(a).

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ALBURG v. JONES, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alburg-v-jones-paed-2025.